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  • Edward Elgar Publishing  (20)
  • Nickel, Johanna (1916-1984)
  • Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc  (20)
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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781783475117
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (200 p) , ill , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New horizons in management
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Hunt, Carianne M. Coaching for women entrepreneurs
    DDC: 650.1/082
    Keywords: Unternehmer ; Frauen ; Coaching ; E-Learning ; Großbritannien ; Businesswomen Training of ; Unternehmerin ; Weibliche Führungskraft ; Coaching
    Abstract: 1. Introduction -- 2. Internal influences on women entrepreneurs -- 3. External influences on women entrepreneurs -- 4. Coaching as a technique for development -- 5. The potential of coaching for women entrepreneurs -- 6. Delivering the tailored e-coaching (TEC) programme -- 7. The impact of the TEC programme on women entrepreneurs -- 8. Entrepreneurial learning in coaching relationships -- 9. Implications for theory and practice.
    Abstract: With update-to-date reviews of the current research and literature on women's entrepreneurship, this is the first book of its kind to address entrepreneurial coaching for women as a development tool. The authors provide a theoretical, conceptual and applied perspective to explore the distinctive challenges facing this group, before discussing the implementations and outcomes of coaching programmes in an entrepreneurial setting. They conclude with strategies for future research and progress. Students and scholars of business management, entrepreneurship and gender studies will find the unique perspectives to be of interest. This book will also be useful as a tool for small business service providers, women entrepreneurs, policy makers and government officials
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781785364068
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (272 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New horizons in international business
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Emerging Asian economies and MNCs strategies
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    Keywords: Multinationales Unternehmen ; Schwellenländer ; Asien ; International business enterprises ; Asia Economic conditions ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Asien ; Multinationales Unternehmen ; Wirtschaftliche Lage
    Abstract: 1. Introduction / Robert Taylor -- Part I: overall overview -- 2. Emerging Asian economies and MNC strategies: a review of the literature / Bernadette Andreosso-O'Callaghan -- 3. Regional production networks in Asia - a focus on china, japan and korea / Françoise Nicolas -- 4. Selected Asian countries and the food supply chain (between food security and food safety) / Maria Bruna Zolin -- Part II: China and Chinese MNEs -- 5. A correlation of China's economic growth and trade structure induced by transaction costs / Quoqin Zhao and Sam Dzever -- 6. MNCs' offshore R&D co-location strategies: comparison of Western and Asian firms in China / Pei Yu and Jean-Louis Mucchielli -- 7. Chinese MNEs direct investment in the European Union against the background of the Euro crisis / Bernadette Andreosso-O'Callaghan and Christopher Dathe -- 8. Expatriation policies of Chinese emerging MNCs / Jacques Jaussaud and Wei Wei -- Part III: emerging MNEs from other Asian countries -- 9. The transatlantic free trade area: Asean's perspective / Utai Uprasen -- 10. Innovation performance in the small and medium enterprises of India - evidence from the food processing industry / Bhumika Gupta and Jeayaram Subramanian -- 11. The emergence of Samsung as a global ICT player / Nigel Callinan -- 12. Conclusion / Robert Taylor.
    Abstract: Analysing the role of multinational investors in emerging Asian economies and the implications for regional economic integration, this astute study examines the increasing role being played by Asian countries in the global economy. Encompassing a large number of diverse manufacturing and service sectors, this book highlights the cultural and strategic challenges faced by multinational investors in the region in which they invest. It shows that despite high rates of economic growth in Asian countries presenting multinational traders and investors with unparalleled market opportunities, there have been only tentative moves towards regional economic integration. Areas such as trade facilitation, uniform customs clearance, removal of non-tariff barriers and labour deployment issues are yet to be adequately addressed. Multifaceted and multidimensional in approach, Emerging Asian Economies and MNCs Strategies will appeal to students and scholars of Asian economies and business management in the region. Its presentation of the sociopolitical and investment environment will also prove invaluable in informing business investors targeting Southeast Asian markets
    Note: Contributors include: B. Andreosso-O'Callaghan, N. Callinan, C. Dathe, S. Dzever, W. Feng, B. Gupta, J. Jaussaud, J.-L. Mucchielli, F. Nicolas, R. Taylor, U. Uprasen, W. Wei, P. Yu, G. Zhao, B. Zolin , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784715014
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (224 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New directions in post-Keynesian economics
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Bortz, Pablo G. Inequality, growth and "hot" money
    DDC: 338.9
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    Keywords: Einkommensverteilung ; Wirtschaftswachstum ; Postkeynesianische Wachstumstheorie ; Verteilungstheorie ; Theorie ; Argentinien ; Income distribution ; Keynesian economics
    Abstract: Preface -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Growth and distribution: the last 300 years -- 3. Growth and distribution: the Kaleckian perspective -- 4. An integration of the real and the monetary economy -- 5. Financial flows, distribution and capital controls -- 6. Epilogue: challenges and possibilities.
    Abstract: The growing levels of income inequality, an explosion of global financial flows, and a worldwide decline of economic growth have combined to challenge accepted economic wisdom. Utilizing a heterodox approach, Pablo G. Bortz provides a fresh look for understanding the interaction between these three factors while identifying challenges and possible alternatives for an expansionary and progressive economic policy. Reviewing several schools of thought, Inequality, Growth and 'Hot' Money explores the risks generated by capital flows and the limitations they impose on progressive economic policies. Professor Bortz then provides instruments and alternatives to pursue an expansionary and equalitarian program, including theoretical contributions to enrich heterodox and progressive economics. Standout features of this book include a review of the challenges that financial flows pose for developing countries; a redefinition of the role of capital controls; a policy approach that separates interest rate policies from a broader credit policy; and a rejection of the negative relationship between a more egalitarian income distribution and sustained economic expansion. Expanding the Kaleckian approach to include financial flows, this accessible introduction to heterodox growth models will be appreciated by graduate students and committed heterodox economists. Research departments at official institutions such as central banks may also be interested, specifically in the book's models and policy prescription
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and indexes
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781785367779
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (192 p) , ill , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: Transport economics, management and policy
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Keywords: National security Economic aspects ; Transportation Security measures ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Preface -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The scale and nature of the terrorist problem -- 3. Some basic economics of transportation security -- 4. Links between market structure and security -- 5. The economic instruments of security policy -- 6. Security and air transportation -- 7. The economics of shopping mall security -- 8. Maritime security -- 9. Some conclusions.
    Abstract: In this clear and observant book, Kenneth Button provides an overview of the economics and political economy of transport security, considering its policy from an economic perspective. His analysis applies micro-economic theory to transport issues, supporting and enhancing the larger framework of our knowledge about personal, industrial, and national security. Button's focus on the economic aspects of transportation security strives to move beyond established technical and legal approaches, working within both the narrower microeconomics of individual and corporate efficiency and the larger trends in economic policy-making. By fitting current security trends into economic analysis, he discusses not only contemporary developments, but also their economic implications and approaches for assessing alternative strategies. This examination of applied economics is a must-read for those looking to gain a broader view of transport security issues. It is a critical resource for those in the security industries as well as those involved in education about transport, security matters, and applied microeconomics
    Note: Includes index
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  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9780857939852
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (608 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Handbook on the economics of the internet
    DDC: 338/.064
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    Keywords: Internet ; Electronic Commerce ; Online-Handel ; Internet Economic aspects ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Internetökonomie
    Abstract: Preface -- Introduction: The economics of the internet: an overview / Johannes M. Bauer and Michael Latzer -- Part II Theoretical foundations -- 1. The industrial organization of the internet / Günter Knieps and Johannes M. Bauer -- 2. The internet as a complex layered system / Stephen J. Schultze and Richard S. Whitt -- 3. A network science approach to the internet / Volker Schneider and Johannes M. Bauer -- 4. Peer production and cooperation / Yochai Benkler -- 5. The internet and productivity / Carol Corrado and Bart Van Ark -- 6. Cultural economics and the internet / Christian Handke, Paul Stepan and Ruth Towse -- 7. A political economy approach to the internet / Patricia Mazepa and Vincent Mosco -- Part II Institutional arrangements and internet architecture -- 8. Competition and antitrust in internet markets / Justus Haucap and Torben Stühmeier -- 9. The economics of internet standards / Stanley M. Besen and George Sadowsky -- 10. The economics of copyright and the internet / Sacha Wunsch-Vincent -- 11. The economics of privacy, data protection and surveillance / Ian Brown -- 12. Economics of cybersecurity / Michel Van Eeten, Hadi Asghari and Johannes M. Bauer -- 13. Internet architecture and innovation in applications / Barbara Van Schewick -- 14. Organizational innovations, ICTs and knowledge governance: the case of platforms / Cristiano Antonelli and Pier Paolo Patrucco -- 15. Interconnection in the internet: peering, interoperability and content delivery / David D. Clark, William H. Lehr and Steven Bauer -- Part III Economics and management of applications and services -- 16. Internet business strategies / Johann J. Kranz and Arnold Picot -- 17. The economics of internet search / Hal R. Varian -- 18. The economics of algorithmic selection on the internet / Michael Latzer, Katharina Hollnbuchner, Natascha Just and Florian Saurwein -- 19. Online advertising economics / Wenjuan Ma and Steven S. Wildman -- 20. Online news / Lucy Küng, Nic Newman and Robert Picard -- 21. The economics of online video entertainment / Ryland Sherman and David Waterman -- 22. Business strategies and revenue models for converged video services / Yu-Li Liu -- 23. The economics of virtual worlds / Isaac Knowles and Edward Castronova -- 24. Economics of big data / Claudio Feijóo, José-Luis Gómez-Barroso and Shivom Aggarwal -- Part IV Trajectories -- 25. The evolution of the internet: a socioeconomic account / D. Linda Garcia -- 26. From the internet of science to the internet of entertainment / Eli M. Noam.
    Abstract: The Internet is connecting an increasing number of individuals, organizations, and devices into global networks of information flows. It is accelerating the dynamics of innovation in the digital economy, affecting the nature and intensity of competition, and enabling private companies, governments, and the non-profit sector to develop new business models. In this new ecosystem many of the theoretical assumptions and historical observations upon which economics rests are altered and need critical reassessment. This Handbook brings together twenty-seven original chapters that discuss theoretical and applied frameworks for the study of the economics of the Internet, encompassing: its unique economics as a global information and communications infrastructure; the effects of the Internet on economic transactions, including social production, advertising, innovation, and intellectual property rights; the economics and management of Internet-based industries, such as search, news, entertainment, culture, and virtual worlds; the effects of the Internet on the economy at large Interdisciplinary in its approach, the Handbook synthesizes the state of knowledge and offers new perspectives for researchers, practitioners, and students
    Note: Contributors include: S. Aggarwal, C. Antonelli, H. Asghari, J.M. Bauer, S. Bauer, Y. Benkler, S.M. Besen, I. Brown, E. Castronova, D.D. Clark, C. Corrado, C. Feijóo, D.L. Garcia, J.-L. Gómez-Barroso, C. Handke, J. Haucap, K. Hollnbuchner, N. Just, G. Knieps, I. Knowles, J.J. Kranz, L. Küng, M. Latzer, W.H. Lehr, Y.-L. Liu, W. Ma, P. Mazepa, V. Mosco, N. Newman, E.M. Noam, P.P. Patrucco, R. Picard, A. Picot, G. Sadowsky, F. Saurwein, V. Schneider, S.J. Schultze, R. Sherman, P. Stepan, T. Stühmeier, R. Towse, B. van Ark, M. van Eeten, B. van Schewick, H.R. Varian, D. Waterman, R.S. Whitt, S.S. Wildman, S. Wunsch-Vincent , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781785361517
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (968 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: The international library of critical writings in economics 317
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The economics of creative industries
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    Keywords: Kreativsektor ; Theorie ; Welt ; Cultural industries Economic aspects ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Alan Kirman (1993), 'Ants, Rationality, and Recruitment', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 108 (1), February, 137-56 -- Sherwin Rosen (1981), 'The Economics of Superstars', American Economic Review, 71 (5), December, 845-58 -- Israel M. Kirzner (1997), 'Entrepreneurial Discovery and the Competitive Market Process: An Austrian Approach', Journal of Economic Literature, 35 (1), March, 60-85 -- Ulrich Witt (2001), 'Learning to Consume - A Theory of Wants and the Growth of Demand', Journal of Evolutionary Economics, 11 (1), January, 23-36 -- A.T. Peacock (1994), 'Welfare Economics and Public Subsidies to the Arts', Journal of Cultural Economics, 18 (2), June, 151-61 -- Tyler Cowen (1996), 'Why I Do Not Believe in the Cost-Disease: Comment on Baumol', Journal of Cultural Economics, 20 (3), 207-14 -- Tyler Cowen and Alexander Tabarrok (2000), 'An Economic Theory of Avant-Garde and Popular Art, or High and Low Culture', Southern Economic Journal, 67 (2), October, 232-53 -- Bryan Caplan and Tyler Cowen (2004), 'Do We Underestimate the Benefits of Cultural Competition?', American Economic Review, 94 (2), May, 402-7 -- Richard Swedberg (2006), 'The Cultural Entrepreneur and the Creative Industries: Beginning in Vienna', Journal of Cultural Economics, 30 (4), December, 243-61 -- Elizabeth Currid (2007), 'The Economics of a Good Party: Social Mechanics and the Legitimization of Art/Culture', Journal of Economics and Finance, 31 (3), Fall, 386-94 -- Michael Hutter (2011), 'Infinite Surprises: On the Stabilization of Value in the Creative Industries', in Jens Beckert and Patrik Aspers (eds), The Worth of Goods: Valuation and Pricing in the Economy, Chapter 9, Oxford, UK and New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 201-20 -- Gary B. Magee (2005), 'Rethinking Invention: Cognition and the Economics of Technological Creativity', Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization, 57 (1), May, 29-48 -- R. Alexander Bentley (2009) 'Fashion versus Reason in the Creative Industries', in Michael J. O'Brien and Stephen J. Shennan (eds), Innovation in Cultural Systems: Contributions from Evolutionary Anthropology, Chapter 8, Cambridge, MA and London, UK: MIT Press, 121-26 -- John Hartley and Lucy Montgomery (2009), 'Fashion as Consumer Entrepreneurship: Emergent Risk Culture, Social Network Markets, and the Launch of Vogue in China', Chinese Journal of Communication, 2 (1), March, 61-76 -- John Banks and Jason Potts (2010), 'Co-creating Games: A Co-evolutionary Analysis', New Media and Society, 12 (2), March, 253-70 -- Jason Potts, John Hartley, John Banks, Jean Burgess, Rachel Cobcroft, Stuart Cunningham and Lucy Montgomery (2008), 'Consumer Co-creation and Situated Creativity', Industry and Innovation, 15 (5), October, 459-74 -- Richard E. Caves (2003), 'Contracts between Art and Commerce', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 17 (2), Spring, 73-84 -- John Quiggin (2013), 'The Economics of New Media', in John Hartley, Jean Burgess and Axel Bruns (eds), A Companion to New Media Dynamics, Chapter 5, Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 90-103 -- Arthur De Vany and W. David Walls (1996), 'Bose-Einstein Dynamics and Adaptive Contracting in the Motion Picture Industry', Economic Journal, 106 (439), November, 1493-514.
    Abstract: Arthur S. De Vany and W. David Walls (2004), 'Motion Picture Profit, the Stable Paretian Hypothesis, and the Curse of the Superstar', Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 28 (6), March, 1035-57 -- Jason Potts, Simon Cunningham, John Hartley and Paul Ormerod (2008), 'Social Network Markets: A New Definition of the Creative Industries', Journal of Cultural Economics, 32 (3), September, 167-85 -- Jason Potts (2012), 'Novelty-Bundling Markets', Advances in Austrian Economics, 16, 291-312 -- Pierre-Michel Menger (1999), 'Artistic Labor Markets and Careers', Annual Review of Sociology, 25, 541-74 -- Martin Kretschmer, George Michael Klimis and Chong Ju Choi (1999), 'Increasing Returns and Social Contagion in Cultural Industries', British Journal of Management, 10 (1), September, S61-S72 -- Peter E. Earl and Jason Potts (2013), 'The Creative Instability Hypothesis', Journal of Cultural Economics, 37 (2), May, 153-73 -- Christian Handke (2006), 'Plain Destruction or Creative Destruction? Copyright Erosion and the Evolution of the Record Industry', Review of Economic Research on Copyright Issues, 3 (2), 29-51 -- Stuart Cunningham (2012), 'Emergent Innovation through Coevolution of Informal and Formal Media Economies', Television and New Media, 13 (5), September, 415-30 -- Hasan Bakhshi and Eric McVittie (2009), 'Creative Supply-Chain Linkages and Innovation: Do the Creative Industries Stimulate Business Innovation in the Wider Economy?', Innovation: Management, Policy and Practice, 11 (2), August, 169-89 -- Kathrin Müller, Christian Rammer and Johannes Trüby (2009), 'The Role of Creative Industries in Industrial Innovation', Innovation: Management, Policy and Practice, 11 (2), August, 148-68 -- Ron Martin and Peter Sunley (2003), 'Deconstructing Clusters: Chaotic Concept or Policy Panacea?', Journal of Economic Geography, 3 (1), January, 5-35 -- Richard Florida (2002), 'Bohemia and Economic Geography', Journal of Economic Geography, 2 (1), January, 55-71 -- Allen J. Scott (2006), 'Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Industrial Development: Geography and the Creative Field Revisited,' Small Business Economics, 26 (1), February, 1-24 -- Luciana Lazzeretti, Rafael Boix and Francesco Capone (2008), 'Do Creative Industries Cluster? Mapping Creative Local Production Systems in Italy and Spain', Industry and Innovation, 15 (5), October, 549-67 -- Michele Boldrin and David Levine (2002), 'The Case Against Intellectual Property', American Economic Review, Papers and Proceedings, 92 (2), May, 209-12 -- Benjamin Klein, Andres V. Lerner and Kevin M. Murphy (2002), 'The Economics of Copyright "Fair Use" in a Networked World', American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, 92 (2), May, 205-8 -- Hal R. Varian (2005), 'Copying and Copyright', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19 (2), Spring, 121-38 -- Ruth Towse (2010), 'Creativity, Copyright and the Creative Industries Paradigm', Kyklos, 63 (3), August, 461-78 -- Christian Handke (2012), 'Digital Copying and the Supply of Sound Recordings', Information Economics and Policy, 24 (1), March, 15-29.
    Abstract: Mikko Mustonen (2003), 'Copyleft - the Economics of Linux and Other Open Source Software', Information Economics and Policy, 15 (1), March, 99-121 -- Josh Lerner and Jean Tirole (2002) 'Some Simple Economics of Open Source' Journal of Industrial Economics, 50 (2), June, 197-234 -- Erik Brynjolfsson, Ju (Jeffrey) Yu and Michael D. Smith (2002), 'Consumer Surplus in the Digital Economy: Estimating the Value of Increased Product Variety at Online Booksellers', Management Science, 49 (11), November, 1580-96 -- Peter Tschmuck (2003), 'How Creative are the Creative Industries? A Case of the Music Industry', Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society, 33 (2), Summer, 127-41 -- John Quiggin (2006), 'Blogs, Wikis and Creative Innovation', International Journal of Cultural Studies, 9 (4), December, 481-96 -- Stuart Cunningham (2002), 'From Cultural to Creative Industries: Theory, Industry and Policy Implications', Media Information Australia, 102, February, 54-65 -- Ann Markusen, Gregory H. Wassall, Douglas DeNatale and Randy Cohen (2008), 'Defining the Creative Economy: Industry and Occupational Approaches', Economic Development Quarterly, 22 (1), February, 24-45 -- Peter Higgs and Stuart Cunningham (2008), 'Creative Industries Mapping: Where Have We Come From and Where Are We Going?', Creative Industries Journal, 1 (1), 7-30 -- Kate Oakley (2004), 'Not So Cool Britannia: The Role of Creative Industries in Economic Development', International Journal of Cultural Studies, 7 (1), March, 67-77 -- Jason Potts (2009), 'Why Creative Industries Matter to Economic Evolution', Economics of Innovation and New Technology, 18 (7), October, 663-73 -- Jason Potts and Stuart Cunningham (2008), 'Four Models of the Creative Industries', International Journal of Cultural Policy, 14 (3), August, 233-47 -- Francisco Marco-Serrano, Pau Rausell-Koster and Raul Abeledo-Sanchis (2014), 'Economic Development and the Creative Industries: A Tale of Causality', Creative Industries Journal, 7 (2), 81-91 -- Jason Potts (2009), 'Creative Industries & Innovation Policy', Innovation: Management, Policy and Practice, 11 (2), August, 138-47 -- Phil Cooke and Lisa De Propris (2011), 'A Policy Agenda for EU Smart Growth: The Role of Creative and Cultural Industries', Policy Studies, 32 (4), July, 365-75.
    Abstract: This timely research review explores the emerging concept of the economics of creative industries. Professor Potts analyses key papers authored by leading scholars in the field which cover the evolution and development of this new area of study. Topics addressed in this review include economic theory foundations, creative economic agents, contracts and organizations, creative industries dynamics and innovation, creative cities and clusters and digital new media and intellectual property
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 7
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781785362385
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (352 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New directions in modern economics
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Financialisation and the financial and economic crises
    DDC: 338.5/42
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    Keywords: Finanzkapitalismus ; Finanzkrise ; Wirtschaftskrise ; Welt ; Financial crises ; Financial instruments ; Electronic books ; Wirtschaftskrise ; Finanzkrise
    Abstract: Preface -- 1. Financialisation and the financial and economic crises: theoretical framework and empirical analysis for 15 countries / Nina Dodig, Eckhard Hein and Daniel Detzer -- 2. The crisis of finance-led capitalism in the United States / Trevor Evans -- 3. Monetary adjustment and inflation of financial claims in the UK after 1980 / John Lepper, Mimoza Shabani, Jan Toporowski and Judith Tyson -- 4. Financialisation and the economic crisis in Spain / Jesús Ferreiro, Cataliana Gálvez and Anna Gonzáles -- 5. Financialisation and the crisis: the case of Greece / Yanis Varoufakis and Lefteris Tserkezis -- 6. The real sector developments in Estonia: financialisation effects behind the transition process / Egert Juuse -- 7. Financialisation and the crisis in the export-led mercantilist German economy / Daniel Detzer and Eckhard Hein -- 8. Swedish financialisation: 'Nordic noir' or 'safe haven'? / Alexis Stenfors -- 9. France, a domestic demand-led economy under the influence of external shocks / Gérard Cornilleau and Jérôme Creel -- 10. The transmission channels between the financial and the real sectors in Italy and the crisis / Giampaolo Gabbi, Elisa Ticci and Pietro Vozzella -- 11. The long boom and the early bust: the Portuguese economy in the era of financialisation / Ricardo Paes Mamede, Sérgio Lagoa, Emanuel Leão and Ricardo Barradas -- 12. Financialisation and the financial and economic crises: the case of Turkey / Serdal Bahçe, Hasan Cömert, Nilgün Erdem, Elif Karaçimen, Ahmet Haşim Köse, Özgür Orhangazi, Gökçer Özgür and Galip Yalman -- 13. The impact of the financial and economic crisis on European Union member states / Carlos A. Carrasco, Jesus Ferreiro, Catalina Galvez, Carmen Gomez and Ana González.
    Abstract: Financialisation and the Financial and Economic Crises provides comparative, empirical case studies of a diverse set of eleven countries. In particular, the book helps in understanding the current (mal)performance of Euro area economies by explaining the causes of the shifts in growth regimes during and after the crises. It goes well beyond the dominant interpretation of the recent financial and economic crises as being rooted in malfunctioning and poorly regulated financial markets. The contributions to this book provide detailed accounts of the long-term effects of financialisation and cover the main developments leading up to and during the crisis in 11 selected countries: the US, the UK, Spain, Greece, Portugal, Germany, Sweden, Italy, France, Estonia, and Turkey. The introductory chapter presents the theoretical framework and synthesizes the main findings of the country studies. Furthermore, the macroeconomic effects of financialisation on the EU as a whole are analysed in the final chapter. Offering an illuminating overview and invaluable alternative perspective on the long-run developments leading to the recent crises, this book is essential reading for researchers, students and policymakers and an ideal starting point for further research
    Note: Contributors include: S. Bahçe, R. Barradas, C.A. Carrasco, G. Cornilleau, H. Cömert, J. Creel, D. Detzer, N. Dodig, N. Erdem, T. Evans, J. Ferreiro, G. Gabbi, C. Gálvez, C. Gomez, A. González, E. Hein, E.Juuse, E. Karaçimen, A.H. Köse, S. Lagoa, E. Leão, J. Lepper, Ö. Orhangazi, R. Paes Mamede, M. Shabani, A. Stenfors, E. Ticci, J. Toporowski, L. Tserkezis, J. Tyson, Y. Varoufakis, P. Vozzella, G.L. Yalman , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781781004920
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (272 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Keywords: Universities and colleges Business management ; Electronic books
    Abstract: 1. Towards a market oriented university -- 2. Competition and rankings -- 3. Delivering student satisfaction -- 4. Disrupting higher education -- 5. From marketing to market orientation -- 6. Developing and maintaining a market-oriented university -- 7. Understanding the market -- 8. Developing strategic directions -- 9. Differentiating, positioning and branding the university.
    Abstract: The next decade will be transformative for the higher education sector. Government funding is decreasing. Through their marketing activities universities have created the 'student consumer.' The student consumer is prepared to shop around, compare prices and value, and once purchased expects a return on their investment. Disruptive innovations are challenging traditional forms of learning and in many cases are viewed as better alternatives to traditional learning in the classroom. Competition from private educational providers is increasing. Their cost base is lower, and their customer focus is superior. In short, universities around the world are facing a perfect storm. While experts don't expect the higher education sector to collapse under these challenges, they do believe that for some institutions the future looks bleak. If universities are to avoid closures or mergers, they will need to adopt a market-oriented approach. This timely book urges readers to view students as customers and focuses on how universities need to reinvent themselves in order to stay relevant. Striking a difference between market-oriented and marketing, the authors provide various examples of institutions around the world that are making efforts to reposition themselves. Additionally, this book delves into the issue of undervalued faculty, arguing that education practices are in desperate need of being reimagined due to the abundance of MOOCs and adaptive and experiential learning practices within universities these days. Both university and academic leaders alike, including presidents, provosts, deans, and faculty will find value in the instructional aspects of this book as they relate to their involvement with institutional advancement agendas as well as providing insight into the changing nature of higher education and the evolving definition of what an academic career now entails
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784711795
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (296 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: Research handbooks in business and management series
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Handbook on corporate governance in financial institutions
    DDC: 332.10688
    RVK:
    Keywords: Corporate Governance ; Bank ; Welt ; Corporate governance ; Financial institutions ; Electronic books ; Kreditinstitut ; Bank ; Corporate Governance
    Abstract: Introduction and overview / Christine A. Mallin -- Part I Corporate governance in Europe -- 1. An evolutionary overview of the ownership, governance and strategy of Mediobanca: from the kingmaker of Italian capitalism to a large financial conglomerate / Francesca Cuomo and Alessandro Zattoni -- 2. The Co-operative Bank: what went wrong? / Chris Mallin -- 3. Remuneration-based incentives in a global bank before and after Lehman - the case of Deutsche Bank / Stefan Prigge -- Part II Corporate governance in the USA and South America -- 4. CEO compensation in US financial institutions / Martin J. Conyon and Lerong He -- 5. Regulation, ownership and corporate governance in Brazilian banks / Rafael F. Schiozer and Paolo R.S. Terra -- Part III Corporate governance in the Asia Pacific -- 6. Corporate governance of Japanese banks / Christina L. Ahmadjian -- 7. Corporate governance of China's city commercial banks / On Kit Tam, Hsin-Yu Liang and Kuo-Jen Chang -- 8. Failure in corporate governance - financial planning and greed / Gail Pearson -- Part IV Corporate governance: additional dimensions -- 9. Determinants of corporate governance in Russian banks / Inessa Love and Botir Okhunjanov -- 10. Corporate governance practices in the Nigerian banking industry / Chris Ogbechie -- 11. Corporate governance in Islamic financial institutions: what have we learnt? / Hisham Farag.
    Abstract: The global financial crisis has led to more and more focus on corporate governance and financial institutions. There has been much coverage in the media about various corporate governance-related issues in banks and other financial institutions, such as executive directors' remuneration and bankers' bonuses, board composition and board diversity. This book, dedicated to the corporate governance of banks and other financial institutions, makes a timely and accessible contribution to the literature in this area. The contributors are experts in their field with in-depth knowledge of the various countries covered in this book, including Italy, the UK, Germany, the US, China, Japan, Brazil, Russia, Australia and Nigeria, plus a chapter on Islamic financial institutions. Overall, the engagingly written chapters highlight many of the shortcomings of corporate governance which have led to financial scandals, whilst indicating areas where corporate governance can be strengthened and improved. Adding depth and accessibility to existing corporate governance books, this Handbook is ideal as a teaching and learning tool for undergraduate and postgraduate students. For directors and the general business and wider stakeholder communities concerned with corporate governance, it is an essential resource
    Note: Contributors include: C.L. Ahmadjian, K.-J. Chang, M.J. Conyon, F. Cuomo, H. Farag, L. He, H.-Y Liang, I. Love, C.A. Mallin, C. Ogbechie, B. Okhunjanov, G. Pearson, S. Prigge, R.F. Schiozer, O.K. Tam, P.R.S. Terra, A. Zattoni , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 10
    ISBN: 9781785364761
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (288 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New directions in post-keynesian economics
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The financialization response to economic disequilibria
    DDC: 339.5
    Keywords: Finanzkapitalismus ; Ungleichgewichtsökonomie ; Europa ; Lateinamerika ; Equilibrium (Economics) ; Business cycles ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Introduction what are the issues now? controversies about disequilibria, economic growth, and economic policies / Noemi Levy and Etelberto Ortiz -- Part I -- Structural desequilibria in Europe: what to do -- 1. A structural and monetary perspective of the Euro crisis / Riccardo Bellofiore, Francesco Garibaldo and Mariana Mortagua -- 2. The big financial crisis and the European economic adjustment: a road towards the strengthening of the neoliberal agenda / Ma. Guadalupe Huerta -- 3. Debt deflation theory and the great recession / Domenica Tropeano and Alessandro Vercelli -- Part II -- The forces of desequilibria at work: their impact on growth -- 4. The periphery in the productive globalization: a new dependency? / Alan Cibils and Germán Pinazo -- 5. Latin America in the new international order: new forms of economic organizations and old forms of surplus appropriation / Noemi Levy -- 6. Inequality, technological change and worldwide economic recovery / Carlos A. Rozo -- 7. Global disequilibria and the inequitable distribution of income / Alma Chapoy -- 8. Transformations of entrepreneurial capitalism, crises and the need for a radical change in economic policy / Hassan Bougrine and Louis-Philippe Rochon -- Part III -- Disequilibria in the Mexican economy: the export growth model, economic stagnation and labor precarization -- 9. The limits of the export led growth model: the Mexican experience / Etelberto Ortiz -- 10. The Mexican economy in 2014: between crisis, free trade, social devastation and labour precarization / Alejandro Álvarez and Sandra Martínez -- 11. The accumulation mode of production in Mexico and the economic structure of the manufacturing industry / Luis Kato -- Part IV -- Disequilibria in Mexico: the financial and fiscal trap -- 12. Economic growth and financial development in mexico: from a virtuous circle of a bi-directional causality to a financial subordination / Teresa López and Eufemia Basilio -- 13. Private ssector finance in the era of deregulation and economic openness: Mexico 2000-2014 / Christian Domínguez and Juan Marroquín -- 14. Pro-cyclical fiscal policy and the fiscal support of the Mexican monetary policy / Luis Á. Ortiz.
    Abstract: Europe and Latin America's social and economic stagnation is a direct result of the unresolved phenomena of the financialization crisis that broke out in 2008 in developed countries. Editors Noemi Levy and Etelberto Ortiz analyze the limitations of economic growth and development under capitalist economic organizations where financial capital is dominant, as well as explore alternative economic policies. This book argues that institutional settings based on the international monetary market, the global production organization and the international commerce arrangements need to be redesigned to improve countries' economic growth, job opportunities and salaries. In order for economic disequilibria to be reduced among regions, countries and social classes, economic surplus appropriation must be regulated. Divided into four distinct thematic sections, the chapters discuss how income distribution must be re-evaluated in order to halt the economic crisis of developing countries in Europe and Latin America, and to boost a new cycle of economic growth and development. This critical discussion will be of value to economic scholars and researchers, policymakers wishing to learn more about the limitations of economic growth, as well as journalists specializing in economic issues
    Note: Contributors include: A. Álvarez, E. Basilio, R. Bellofiore, H. Bougrine, A. Chapoy, A. Cibils, C. Domínguez, F. Garibaldo, M. Guadalupe Huerta, L. Kato, N. Levy, T. López, J. Marroquín, S. Martínez, M. Mortagua, E. Ortiz, L.Á. Ortiz, G. Pinazo, L.-P. Rochon, C.A. Rozo, D. Tropeano. A. Vercelli , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 11
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784711153
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (400 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New horizons in management
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Research handbook on employee turnover
    RVK:
    Keywords: Labor turnover ; Personnel management Methodology ; Employee turnover ; Organizational turnover ; Fluktuation
    Abstract: 1. Introduction / Cary Cooper and George Saridakis -- 2. Employee turnover / Harald Dale-Olsen -- 3. Understanding and measuring employee turnover / Kevin Morrell -- 4. Two decades of employee retention, tenure and turnover / Peter Urwin and Emma Parry -- 5. Analysing, monitoring and costing labour turnover / Stephen Bevan -- 6. Employee turnover as a cost factor of organisations / Anne-Marie Mohammed, Yanqing Lai, Maria Daskalaki and George Saridakis -- 7. Inter- and intra-firm mobility of workers / Tor Eriksson -- 8. Perception of training and turnover intention / Choi Sang Long and Mikkay Wong El Leen -- 9. Compensation policy and employee turnover / Stephen Taylor -- 10. Turnover amongst Generation Y / Linda Holbeche -- 11. A role perspective on turnover intentions: examining behavioral predictors / Jui-Tang Kao and Wan-Jing April Chang -- 12. A diagnostic methodology for discovering the reasons for employee turnover using shocks and events / Justin Purl, Kathleen Hall and Rodger W. Griffeth -- 13. Quit turnover and the business cycle: a survey / Carlos Carrillo-Tudela and Melvyn Coles -- 14. Employment, turnover and career progress / Priscila Ferreira -- 15. Employee turnover and the expansion and contraction of employers / Mario Bossler and Richard Upward -- 16. High performance human resource practices and voluntary employee turnover / Inmaculada Beltrán Martín.
    Abstract: Covering the period of the financial crisis, this Research Handbook discusses the degree of importance of different driving forces on employee turnover. The discussions contribute to policy agendas on productivity, firm performance and economic growth. The contributors provide a selection of theoretical and empirical research papers that deal with aspects of employee turnover, as well as its effects on workers and firms within the current socio-economic environment. It draws on theories and evidence from economics, management, social sciences and other related disciplines. With its interdisciplinary approach, this book will appeal to a variety of students and academics in related fields. It will also be of interest to policy makers, HR experts, firm managers and other stakeholders
    Note: Contributors include: I. Beltrán Martín, S. Bevan, M. Bossler, C. Carrillo-Tudela, W.-J.A. Chang, M. Coles, H. Dale-Olsen, M. Daskalaki, T. Eriksson, P. Ferreira, R.W. Griffeth, K. Hall, L. Holbeche, J.-T. Kao, Y. Lai, C.S. Long, A.-M. Mohammed, K. Morrell, E. Parry, J. Purl, G. Saridakis, S. Taylor, R. Upward, P. Urwin, M. Wong El Leen , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 12
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781785366314
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (208 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Grand, Simon, 1968 - Routines, strategies and management
    DDC: 658.4012
    Keywords: Strategisches Management ; Strategic planning ; Management Methodology
    Abstract: 1. Researching routines as strategies - a strategy-as-practice view -- 2. Theorizing routine dynamics - a practice view -- 3. Managerial engagement - a practice view on strategic management -- 4. Managing routines as strategies - a case in haute couture textiles -- 5. Routinizing strategic management - a case in software engineering -- Conclusion -- References.
    Abstract: The dynamic interplay of routines, strategies and management allows companies to successfully move forward within their industries. This book contributes to a coherent conceptualization of strategy, organization and management from a practice perspective, identifying strategy as realized in the action. Simon Grand provides a theoretical framework and detailed exploration in the context of two attractive empirical cases. He discusses topics such as theorizing routine dynamics, managerial engagement and managing routines as strategies to provide a detailed exploration of the importance of organizational routines for strategy. This book will be of interest to researchers in the areas of organizational studies, strategic management, technological innovation and the creative industries. The empirical case studies will also be of use to students and scholars of various disciplines
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 13
    ISBN: 9781783479849
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (336 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: The McGill international entrepreneurship series
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Keywords: Entrepreneurship ; International business enterprises ; Electronic books
    Abstract: 1. Introduction / Hamid Etemad -- Part I: Examination of entrepreneurial orientation-performance relations -- 2. International entrepreneurship and performance: what are the important factors in markets with high cultural distance? / Elena Cedrola, Loretta Battaglia and Anna Grazia Quaranta -- 3. Risk-seeking behaviors in SMEs' internationalization / Noémie Dominguez -- 4. Psychological traits, experiences, foreign language knowledge of entrepreneurs, and re-internationalization strategies of SMEs: a theoretical analysis / Huu Le Nguyen and Sören Kock -- Part II: Collaborative inter-dependence -- 5. The dynamic development of international entrepreneurial networks / Vaiva Stanisauskaite and Sören Kock -- 6. The influence of the entrepreneur and the accelerator in the internationalization process of web-based firms / Diala Kabbara -- 7. Formal inter-firm cooperation and international expansion: how Italian SMEs are using the network contract / S. Aureli and M. Del Baldo -- 8. How are knowledge acquisition and SMEs' internationalization related? empirical evidence from Gruppo Germani / Mirella Migliaccio and Francesca Rivetti -- 9. Value chain activities in born global companies / Ingemar Wictor -- Part III: Institutional context -- 10. The creation and internationalization of border firms / Eva J.B. Jørgensen and Einar Rasmussen -- 11. Institutional entrepreneurship and the embedded roles of the leaders and state: an historical case study of Abu Dhabi / Jasem Almarri, Katariina Juusola and John Meewella -- 12. Concluding remarks, implications and lessons / Hamid Etemad.
    Abstract: The Changing Global Economy and its Impact on International Entrepreneurship addresses different changes and challenges that small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs) face in an economy where they need to compete at home and cannot refrain from participating in international markets. Contributors examine diverse SMEs that have succeeded in the face of adversity. They offer a combination of practical strategies and efficient tactics, grounded in solid theory and research, for firms in different competitive industries. This volume presents a collection of 12 carefully selected chapters that highlight challenging real-world cases to illustrate a variety of difficult problems. The editors present an analytical framework with three levels of analysis - entrepreneurial level, firm level, and institutional level - to document comprehensive, realistic and experientially-based entrepreneurial initiatives, potent firm and public policy strategies and informative and applicable results. The interactive structural design of this book offers progressively higher levels of analysis and incisive lessons, which make it perfect for academics interested in the rich range of theories, methodologies and topics surrounding SMEs' internationalization processes. Its analysis will also inform management and effective policy formulation for entrepreneurs, managers, and policymakers
    Note: Contributors include: J. Almarri, S. Aureli, H. Etemad, M. Del Baldo, N. Dominguez, E.J.B. Jørgensen, K. Juusola, D. Kabbara, S. Kock, J. Meewella, H. Le Nguyen, M. Migliaccio, E. Rasmussen, F. Rivetti, V. Stanisauskaite, I. Wictor , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 14
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784714680
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (320 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als How to get published in the best management journals
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Management Handbooks, manuals, etc ; Periodicals Publishing ; Academic publishing ; Electronic books ; Betriebswirtschaftslehre ; Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift ; Betriebswirtschaftslehre ; Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift
    Abstract: 1. Introduction / Timothy Clark, Mike Wright and David J. Ketchen, Jr. -- Part I The publishing process -- 2. The publishing process: a case study / Petra Andries and Mike Wright 3. Getting published: an editorial and journal ranker's perspective / Geoffrey Wood and Pawan Budhwar -- 4. Ethics and integrity in publishing / Ben R. Martin -- 5. Sustaining a publications career / Mike Wright -- 6. Why publish in Asia management journals? / Daphne W. Yiu 7. Squeezing lemons to make fresh lemonade: how to extract useful value from peer reviews / William H. Starbuck -- Part II resolving practical key issues becoming a scholar -- 8. Rules of the game / Denny Gioia -- 9. Learning by walking through the snow / R. Duane Ireland -- 10. Suggestions for strengthening the discussion section and increasing your odds of publication success / Donald D. Bergh -- 11. You miss 100% of the shots you don't take / Annette L. Ranft and Anne D. Smith -- 12. Why I don't want to co-author with you and what you can do about it / Dave Ketchen -- Getting your methods right -- 13. Are your results really robust? / Bruce T. Lamont -- 14. The reviewers don't like my sample! what can I do? / Brian K. Boyd -- 15. When being normal is not enough: a few thoughts about data, analyses and (the storm of) re-analyses / Philp L. Roth and Wayne H. Stewart Jr. -- Navigating the review process -- 16. Selling your soul to the devil? mistakes authors make when responding to reviewers / Pamela L. Perrewé -- 17. Respond to me - please! / James G. Combs -- 18. Challenging the gods: circumstances justifying the protest of a journal rejection decision / Gerald R. Ferris -- Understanding the journals -- 19. Publishing in the top journals: the secrets for success / Michael A. Hitt -- 20. Hitting your preferred target: positioning papers for different types of journals / Yehuda Baruch -- 21. Targeting journals: a personal journey / Franz W. Kellermanns -- 22. Read the damn article: the appropriate place of journal lists in organizational science scholarship / M. Ronald Buckley -- 23. Publishing in special issues / Timothy Clark -- 24. Using new media to promote and extend published work / Aija Leiponen and Will Mitchell -- 25. Should you publish in an open-access journal? / Charles C. Snow -- Part III publishing across disciplinary boundaries -- 26. Publishing in finance versus entrepreneurship/management journals / Douglas Cumming -- 27. Publishing in management journals: how is it different from economics journals / Saul Estrin and Sumon Kumar Bhaumik -- 28. Publishing in management journals as a social psychologist / Rolf van Dick -- 29. Publishing historical papers in management journals and in business history journals / Steven Toms -- 30. Publishing human resource management research in different kinds of journals / Bill Harley -- 31. Publishing in top international business and management journals / Stephen Tallman and Torben Pederson -- 32. Publishing at the interfaces of psychology and strategic management / Gerard P. Hodgkinson.
    Abstract: An increasing number of universities around the globe are rewarding faculty who place their work in top management journals. Drawing on the insights from top journal editors and leading scholars in the field, this book is a treasure trove of tips for publishing in the best management journals. The topics covered include the mysteries of the review process, getting your methodology right, publishing across disciplinary boundaries, the rise of open access journals, publishing ethics, making use of peer review, targeting special issues, sustaining a publications career, and making sense of journal rankings. Drawing on the considerable experience of its authors, and offering candid insights that are often held as secrets among senior faculty, this book takes the reader behind the scenes of the journal review process, making it a must-read for those seeking to advance their career
    Note: Contributors include: P. Andries, Y. Baruch, D.D. Bergh, S.K. Bhaumik, B.K. Boyd, M.R. Buckley, P. Budhwar, T. Clark, J.G. Combs, D. Cumming, S. Estrin, G.R. Ferris, D. Gioia, B. Harley, M.A. Hitt, G.P. Hodgkinson, R.D. Ireland, F.W. Kellermanns. D.J. Ketchen Jr., B.T. Lamont, A. Leiponen, B.R. Martin, W. Mitchell, T. Pederson, P.L. Perrewé, A.L. Ranft, P.L. Roth, A.D. Smith, C.C. Snow, W.H. Starbuck, W.H. Stewart Jr., S. Tallman, S. Toms, R. Van Dick, G. Wood, M. Wright, D.W. Yiu , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 15
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781783472499
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (384 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: Advances in ecological economics
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Beyond uneconomic growth
    DDC: 333.7
    Keywords: Daly, Herman E ; Umweltökonomik ; Nachhaltige Entwicklung ; Steady-State-Ökonomie ; Environmental economics ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Umweltökonomie ; Nachhaltigkeit
    Abstract: In memoriam for Robert Goodland -- Part I Introduction -- 1. The foundations for an ecological economy: an overview / Joshua Farley -- 2. The world in over-shoot: a celebration of Herman Daly's contributions to ecological economics - the science of sustainability / Robert Goodland -- 3. Toward a sustainable and desirable future: a 35 year collaboration with Herman Daly / Robert Costanza -- Part II Changing the paradigm: what is biophysically possible, and how do humans behave? -- 4. Population, resources, and energy in the global economy: a vindication of Herman Daly's vision / Jonathan M. Harris -- 5. On limits / Arild Vatn -- 6. Toward a science-based theory of behavior: building on Georgescu-Roegen / John Gowdy -- 7. Denying Herman Daly: why conventional economics will not embrace the Daly vision / William E. Rees -- Part III Changing the goals: what is socially, psychologically and ethically desirable? -- 8. The importance of just distribution in a 'full' world / Philip Lawn -- 9. Hicksian income, welfare, and the steady state / Salah El Serafy -- Part IV Changing the rules: institutions for a sustainable and desirable future -- 10. Ecological and Georgist economic principles: a comparison / Clifford Cobb -- 11. Making money / John B. Cobb, Jr. -- Part V The steady-state economy -- 12. The steady-state economy / Peter A. Victor -- 13. Socially sustainable economic degrowth / Joan Martinez Alier -- 14. Politics for a steady state economy / Brian Czech -- Part VI Conclusions -- 15. The unfinished journey of ecological economics: toward an ethic of ecological citizenship / Peter G. Brown.
    Abstract: This engaging book brings together leading ecological economists to collectively present a definitive case for looking beyond economic growth as the sole panacea for the world's ecological predicament. Grounded in physics, ecology, and the science of human behavior, contributors show how economic growth itself has become "uneconomic" and adds to a ravaging of both social and ecological cohesion. Guided by a clear moral vision that prioritizes sustainability and justice over profit, the authors provide a blueprint for an economy that replaces quantitative growth with qualitative improvement to enhance human welfare while restoring degraded ecosystems. They present solutions for many of today's challenges, ranging from global climate change and biodiversity loss to natural resource depletion. This interdisciplinary work not only relates ecological economics theory to the most urgent predicaments of the contemporary world, but also pays tribute to the work of Herman Daly, a leading pioneer of modern ecological economics. Researchers and faculty studying and teaching ecological economics and environmental studies will find value in this unprecedented book. It will also be of interest to practitioners working to solve a variety of global environmental issues
    Note: Contributors include: P.G. Brown, C. Cobb, J.B. Cobb, Jr., R. Costanza, B. Czech, S. El Serafy, J. Farley, R. Goodland, J. Gowdy, J.M. Harris, P. Lawn, D. Malghan, J. Martinez Alier, W.E. Rees, A. Vatn, P.A. Victor , Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 16
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784718343
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (2,432 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: The international library of critical writings in economics series
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Recent developments in the economics of executive compensation
    Keywords: Managervergütung ; Executives Salaries, etc ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Steven N. Kaplan (2013), 'CEO Pay and Corporate Governance in the U.S.: Perceptions, Facts, and Challenges', Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 25 (2), Spring, 8-25 -- John E. Core, Wayne R. Guay and David F. Larcker (2003), 'Executive Equity Compensation and Incentives: A Survey', Federal Reserve Bank of New York Economic Policy Review, 9 (1), April, 27-50 -- Brian J. Hall and Kevin J. Murphy (2003), 'The Trouble With Stock Options', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 17 (3), Summer, 49-70 -- Arantxa Jarque (2008), 'CEO Compensation: Trends, Market Changes, and Regulation', Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly, 94 (3), Summer, 265-300 -- Carola Frydman and Dirk Jenter (2010), 'CEO Compensation', Annual Review of Financial Economics, 2 (1), December, 75-102 -- Michael Faulkender, Dalida Kadyrzhanova, N. Prabhala and Lemma Senbet (2010), 'Executive Compensation: An Overview of Research on Corporate Practices and Proposed Reforms', Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 22 (1), Winter, 107-18 -- Lucian Bebchuk and Yaniv Grinstein (2005), 'The Growth of Executive Pay', Oxford Review of Economic Policy, 21 (2), Summer, 283-303 -- Xavier Gabaix and Augustin Landier (2008), 'Why Has CEO Pay Increased So Much?', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 123 (1), February, 49-100 -- Carola Frydman and Raven E. Saks (2010), 'Executive Compensation: A New View from a Long-Term Perspective, 1936-2005', Review of Financial Studies, 23 (5), May, 2099-138 -- Richard A. Lord and Yoshie Saito (2010), 'Trends in CEO Compensation and Equity Holdings for S&P 1500 Firms: 1994-2007', Journal of Applied Finance, 20 (2), 40-56 -- Martin J. Conyon, John E. Core and Wayne R. Guay (2011), 'Are U.S. CEOs Paid More Than U.K. CEOs? Inferences from Risk-adjusted Pay', Review of Financial Studies, 24 (2), February, 402-38 -- Nuno Fernandes, Miguel A. Ferreira, Pedro Matos and Kevin J. Murphy (2013), 'Are U.S. CEOs Paid More? New International Evidence', Review of Financial Studies, 26 (2), February, 323-67 -- Xavier Gabaix, Augustin Landier and Julien Sauvagnat (2014), 'CEO Pay and Firm Size: An Update After the Crisis', Economic Journal, 124 (574), February, F40-F59 -- Eli Ofek and David Yermack (2000), 'Taking Stock: Equity-Based Compensation and the Evolution of Managerial Ownership', Journal of Finance, LV (3), June, 1367-84 -- Brian J. Hall and Kevin J. Murphy (2000), 'Optimal Exercise Prices for Executive Stock Options', American Economic Review, 90 (2), May, 209-14 -- Anil Arya and Brian Mittendorf (2005), 'Offering Stock Options to Gauge Managerial Talent', Journal of Accounting and Economics, 40 (1-3), December, 189-210 -- Bo Becker (2006), 'Wealth and Executive Compensation', Journal of Finance, LXI (1), February, 379-97 -- Jayant R. Kale, Ebru Reis and Anand Venkateswaran (2010), 'Promotion Incentives and Corporate Performance: Is There a Bright Side to "Overpaying" the CEO?', Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 22 (1), Winter, 119-28 -- Radhakrishnan Gopalan, Todd Milbourn, Fenghua Song and Anjan V. Thakor (2014), 'Duration of Executive Compensation', Journal of Finance, LXIX (6), December, 2777-817.
    Abstract: Lucian A. Bebchuk and Robert J. Jackson, Jr. (2005), 'Executive Pensions', Journal of Corporation Law, 30 (4), 823-55 -- Lucian A. Bebchuk, K.J. Martijn Cremers and Urs C. Peyer (2011), 'The CEO Pay Slice', Journal of Financial Economics, 102 (1), October, 199-221 -- Zhihong Chen, Yuan Huang and K.C. John Wei (2005), 'Executive Pay Disparity and the Cost of Equity Capital', Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 48 (3), June, 849-85 -- Omesh Kini and Ryan Williams (2012), 'Tournament Incentives, Firm Risk, and Corporate Policies', Journal of Financial Economics, 103 (2), February, 350-76 -- Steven N. Kaplan and Joshua Rauh (2013), 'It's the Market: The Broad-Based Rise in the Return to Top Talent', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 27 (3), Summer, 35-55 -- Olubunmi Faleye, Ebru Reis and Anand Venkateswaran (2013), 'The Determinants and Effects of CEO-Employee Pay Ratios', Journal of Banking and Finance, 37 (8), August, 3258-72 -- Kevin J. Murphy (2002), 'Explaining Executive Compensation: Managerial Power versus the Perceived Cost of Stock Options', University of Chicago Law Review, 69 (3), Summer, 847-69 -- Lucian Arye Bebchuk and Jesse M. Fried (2003), 'Executive Compensation as an Agency Problem', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 17 (3), Summer, 71-92 -- Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan (2000), 'Agents With and Without Principals', American Economic Review, 90 (2), May, 203-8 -- Jay C. Hartzell and Laura T. Starks (2003), 'Institutional Investors and Executive Compensation', Journal of Finance, LVIII (6), December, 2351-74 -- Vidhi Chhaochharia and Yaniv Grinstein (2009), 'CEO Compensation and Board Structure', Journal of Finance, LXIV (1), February, 231-61 -- Henrik Cronqvist and Rüdiger Fahlenbrach (2013), 'CEO Contract Design: How do Strong Principals Do It?', Journal of Financial Economics, 108 (3), June, 659-74 -- Marianne Bertrand and Sendhil Mullainathan (2003), 'Enjoying the Quiet Life? Corporate Governance and Managerial Preferences', Journal of Political Economy, 111 (5), October, 1043-75 -- Martin J. Conyon (2014), 'Executive Compensation and Board Governance in US Firms', Economic Journal, 124 (574), February, F60-F89 -- Lucian A. Bebchuk and Jesse M. Fried (2005), 'Pay Without Performance: Overview of the Issues', Journal of Corporation Law, 30 (4), Summer, 647-73 -- John E. Core, Wayne R. Guay and Randall S. Thomas (2005), 'Is U.S. CEO Compensation Inefficient Pay Without Performance?', Michigan Law Review, 103, May, 1142-85 -- Adair Morse, Vikram Nanda and Amit Seru (2011), 'Are Incentive Contracts Rigged by Powerful CEOs?', Journal of Finance, LXVI (5), October, 1779-821 -- Alex Edmans and Xavier Gabaix (2009), 'Is CEO Pay Really Inefficient? A Survey of New Optimal Contracting Theories', European Financial Management, 15 (3), June, 486-96 -- Richard T. Holden (2005), 'The Original Management Incentive Schemes', Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19 (4), Fall, 135-44.
    Abstract: Patrick Bolton, Hamid Mehran and Joel Shapiro (2010), 'Executive Compensation and Risk Taking', Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Staff Report No. 456, June, i, 1-43 -- Jennifer N. Carpenter (2000), 'Does Option Compensation Increase Managerial Risk Appetite?', Journal of Finance, LV (5), October, 2311-31 -- Stephen A. Ross (2004), 'Compensation, Incentives, and the Duality of Risk Aversion and Riskiness', Journal of Finance, LIX (1), February, 207-25 -- Jeffrey L. Coles, Naveen D. Daniel and Lalitha Naveen (2006), 'Managerial Incentives and Risk-Taking', Journal of Financial Economics, 79 (2), February, 431-68 -- John McCormack and Judy Weiker (2010), 'Rethinking "Strength of Incentives" for Executives of Financial Institutions', Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 22 (3), Summer, 65-72 -- Zhiyong Dong, Cong Wang and Fei Xie (2010), 'Do Executive Stock Options Induce Excessive Risk Taking?', Journal of Banking and Finance, 34 (10), October, 2518-29 -- Neil Brisley (2006), 'Executive Stock Options: Early Exercise Provisions and Risk-taking Incentives', Journal of Finance, LXI (5), October, 2487-509 -- George J. Benston and Jocelyn D. Evan (2006), 'Performance Compensation Contracts and CEOs' Incentive to Shift Risk to Debtholders: An Empirical Analysis', Journal of Economics and Finance, 30 (1), Spring, 70-92 -- Cory A. Cassell, Shawn X. Huang, Juan Manuel Sanchez and Michael D. Stuart (2012) , 'Seeking Safety: The Relation Between CEO Inside Debt Holding and the Riskiness of Firm Investment and Financial Policies', Journal of Financial Economics, 103 (3), March, 588-610 -- Yixin Liu, David C. Mauer and Yilei Zhang (2014), 'Firm Cash Holdings and CEO Inside Debt', Journal of Banking and Finance, 42, May, 83-100 -- Divya Anantharaman, Vivian W. Fang and Guojin Gong (2014), 'Inside Debt and the Design of Corporate Debt Contracts', Management Science, 60 (5), May, 1260-80 -- Efraim Benmelech, Eugene Kandel and Pietro Veronesi (2010), 'Stock-Based Compensation and CEO (Dis)incentives', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125 (4), November, 1769-820 -- Patrick Bolton, José Scheinkman and Wei Xiong (2006), 'Executive Compensation and Short-Termist Behaviour in Speculative Markets', Review of Economic Studies, 73 (3), July, 577-610 -- Henrik Cronqvist, Fredrik Heyman, Mattias Nilsson, Helena Svaleryd and Jonas Vlachos (2008), 'Do Entrenched Managers Pay Their Workers More?', Journal of Finance, LXIV (1), February, 309-39 -- Ronald W. Masulis and Syed Walid Reza (2014), 'Agency Problems of Corporate Philanthropy', Review of Financial Studies, 28 (2), February, 592-636 -- Tom Nohel and Steven Todd (2004), 'Stock Options and Managerial Incentives to Invest', Journal of Derivatives Accounting, 1 (1), March, 29-46 -- Ulrike Malmendier and Geoffrey Tate (2005), 'CEO Overconfidence and Corporate Investment', Journal of Finance, LX (6), December, 2661-700 -- Ulrike Malmendier and Geoffrey Tate (2008), 'Who Makes Acquisitions? CEO Overconfidence and the Market's Reaction', Journal of Financial Economics, 89 (1), July, 20-43 -- Jie Cai and Anand M. Vijh (2007), 'Incentive Effects of Stock and Option Holdings of Target and Acquirer CEOs', Journal of Finance, LXII (4), August, 1891-933.
    Abstract: Eliezer M. Fich, Jie Cai and Anh L. Tran (2011), 'Stock Option Grants to Target CEOs During Private Merger Negotiations', Journal of Financial Economics, 101 (2), May, 413-30 -- Yixin Liu and David C. Mauer (2011), 'Corporate Cash Holdings and CEO Compensation Incentives', Journal of Financial Economics, 102 (1), October, 183-98 -- Hernan Ortiz-Molina (2006), 'Top Management Incentives and the Pricing of Corporate Public Debt', Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 41 (2), June, 317-40 -- Katharina Lewellen (2006), 'Financing Decisions When Managers Are Risk Averse', Journal of Financial Economics, 82 (3), December, 551-89 -- Hernan Ortiz-Molina (2007), 'Executive Compensation and Capital Structure: The Effects of Convertible Debt and Straight Debt on CEO Pay', Journal of Accounting and Economics, 43 (1), March, 69-93 -- Paul Brockman, Xiumin Martin and Emre Unlu (2010), 'Executive Compensation and the Maturity Structure of Corporate Debt', Journal of Finance, LXV (3), June, 1123-61 -- Sudheer Chava, Praveen Kumar and Arthur Warga (2010), 'Managerial Agency and Bond Covenants', Review of Financial Studies, 23 (3), March, 1120-48 -- J. Carr Bettis, John M. Bizjak and Michael L. Lemmon (2005), 'Exercise Behavior, Valuation, and the Incentive Effects of Employee Stock Options', Journal of Financial Economics, 76 (2), May, 445-70 -- David Aboody, John Hughes, Jing Liu and Wei Su (2008), 'Are Executive Stock Option Exercises Driven by Private Information?', Review of Accounting Studies, 13 (4), December, 551-70 -- Robert Brooks, Don M. Chance and Brandon Cline (2012), 'Private Information and the Exercise of Executive Stock Options', Financial Management, 41 (3), Fall, 733-64 -- Jennifer N. Carpenter, Richard Stanton and Nancy Wallace (2010), 'Optimal Exercise of Executive Stock Options and Implications for Firm Cost', Journal of Financial Economics, 98 (2), November, 315-37 -- Daniel Bergstresser and Thomas Philippon (2006), 'CEO Incentives and Earnings Management', Journal of Financial Economics, 80 (3), June, 511-29 -- Keith J. Crocker and Joel Slemrod (2007), 'The Economics of Earnings Manipulation and Managerial Compensation', RAND Journal of Economics, 38 (3), Autumn, 698-713 -- Christopher S. Armstrong, Alan D. Jagolinzer and David F. Larcker (2010), 'Chief Executive Officer Equity Incentives and Accounting Irregularities', Journal of Accounting Research, 48 (2), May, 225-71 -- Lin Peng and Ailsa Röell (2014), 'Managerial Incentives and Stock Price Manipulation', Journal of Finance, LXIX (2), April, 487-526 -- Randall A. Heron and Erik Lie (2007), 'Does Backdating Explain the Stock Price Pattern Around Executive Stock Option Grants?', Journal of Financial Economics, 83 (2), February, 271-95 -- M.P. Narayanan and H. Nejat Seyhun (2008), 'The Dating Game: Do Managers Designate Option Grant Dates to Increase their Compensation?', Review of Financial Studies, 21 (5), September, 1907-45 -- M.P. Narayanan, Cindy A. Schipani and H. Nejat Seyhun (2007), 'The Economic Impact of Backdating of Executive Stock Options', Michigan Law Review, 105 (8), June, 1597-641 -- Jesse M. Fried (2008), 'Option Backdating and Its Implications', Washington and Lee Law Review, 65, 853-86.
    Abstract: Don M. Chance and Tung-Hsiao Yang (2005), 'The Utility-Based Valuation and Cost of Executive Stock Options in a Binomial Framework: Issues and Methodologies', Journal of Derivatives Accounting, 2 (2), September, 165-88 -- Jie Cai and Anand M. Vijh (2005), 'Executive Stock and Option Valuation in a Two State-Variable Framework', Journal of Derivatives, Spring, 9-27 -- Jonathan E. Ingersoll, Jr. (2006), 'The Subjective and Objective Evaluation of Incentive Stock Options', Journal of Business, 79 (2), 453-87 -- Ronnie Sircar and Wei Xiong (2007), 'A General Framework for Evaluating Executive Stock Options', Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 31 (7), July, 2317-49 -- Jakša Cvitanić, Zvi Wiener and Fernando Zapatero (2008), 'Analytic Pricing of Employee Stock Options', Review of Financial Studies, 21 (2), April, 683-724 -- Jonathan E. Ingersoll, Jr. (2006), 'Valuing Reload Options', Review of Derivatives Research, 9 (1), January, 67-105 -- L.C.G. Rogers and José Scheinkman (2007), 'Optimal Exercise of Executive Stock Options', Finance and Stochastics, 11 (3), July, 357-72 -- Frank D. Hodge, Shiva Rajgopal and Terry Shevlin (2009), 'Do Managers Value Stock Options and Restricted Stock Consisted with Economic Theory?', Contemporary Accounting Research, 26 (3), Fall, 899-932.
    Abstract: This essential research review discusses the most important articles on executive compensation published in the twenty-first century. Beginning with an overview of executive compensation, this comprehensive review includes analyses of the growth and magnitude of executive compensation, its relationship with corporate governance, pay and performance, managing assets, and managing liabilities
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings , Includes bibliographical references
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 17
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784718640
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (968 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: The international library of critical writings in economics 319
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Economic behaviour and taxation
    RVK:
    Keywords: Steuertheorie ; Steuerpolitik ; Optimale Besteuerung ; Steuerreform ; Strategisches Management ; Economics Psychological aspects ; Taxation ; Electronic books ; Wirtschaftslenkung ; Steuerrecht
    Abstract: Recommended readings (Machine generated): Richard Blundell, Alan Duncan and Costas Meghir (1998), 'Estimating Labor Supply Responses using Tax Reforms', Econometrica, 66 (4), July, 827-61 -- Sören Blomquist and Whitney Newey (2002), 'Nonparametric Estimation with Nonlinear Budget Sets', Econometrica, 70 (6), November, 2455-80 -- Anil Kumar (2008), 'Labor Supply, Deadweight Loss and Tax Reform -- Austan Goolsbee (2000), 'What Happens When You Tax the Rich? Evidence from Executive Compensation', Journal of Political Economy, 108 (2), April, 352-78 -- Emmanuel Saez (2010), 'Do Taxpayers Bunch at Kink Points?', American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 2 (3), August, 180-212 -- Wojciech Kopczuk (2005), 'Tax Bases, Tax Rates and the Elasticity of Reported Income', Journal of Public Economics, 89 (11-12), December, 2093-119 -- Raj Chetty, John N. Friedman and Emmanuel Saez (2013), 'Using Differences in Knowledge Across Neighborhoods to Uncover the Impacts of the EITC on Earnings', American Economic Review, 103 (7), December, 2683-721 -- Jeffrey Grogger (2003), 'The Effects of Time Limits, the EITC, and Other Policy Changes on Welfare Use, Work, and Income among Female-Headed Families', Review of Economics and Statistics, 85 (2), May, 394-408 -- Bruce D. Meyer and Dan T. Rosenbaum (2001), 'Welfare, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and the Labor Supply of Single Mothers', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 116 (3), August, 1063-114 -- Henrik Jacobsen Kleven, Camille Landais and Emmanuel Saez (2013), 'Taxation and International Migration of Superstars: Evidence from the European Football Market', American Economic Review, 103 (5), August, 1892-924 -- Charles L. Ballard and Jaimin Lee (2007), 'Internet Purchases, Cross-Border Shopping, and Sales Taxes', National Tax Journal, LX (4), December, 711-25 -- Austan Goolsbee (2000), 'In a World without Borders: The Impact of Taxes on Internet Commerce', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 115 (2), May, 561-76 -- Zoran Ivković, James Poterba and Scott Weisbenner (2005), 'Tax-Motivated Trading by Individual Investors', American Economic Review, 95 (5), December, 1605-630 -- Julie Berry Cullen and Roger H. Gordon (2007), 'Taxes and Entrepreneurial Risk-Taking: Theory and Evidence for the U.S.', Journal of Public Economics, 91 (7-8), August, 1479-505 -- Åsa Hansson (2012), 'Tax Policy and Entrepreneurship: Empirical Evidence from Sweden', Small Business Economics, 38 (4), May, 495-513 -- Esther Duflo, William Gale, Jeffrey Liebman, Peter Orszag and Emmanuel Saez (2006), 'Saving Incentives for Low- and Middle- Income Families: Evidence from a Field Experiment with H&R Block', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 121 (4), November, 1311-46 -- Alexander M. Gelber (2011), 'How Do 401(k)s Affect Saving? Evidence from Changes in 401(k) Eligibility', American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, 3 (4), November, 103-22 -- James Alm and Asmaa El-Ganainy (2013), 'Value-Added Taxation and Consumption', International Tax and Public Finance, 20 (1), February, 105-28 -- David Joulfaian (2000), 'Estate Taxes and Charitable Bequests by the Wealthy', National Tax Journal, LIII (3, Part 2), September, 743-63.
    Abstract: Wojciech Kopczuk and Joel Slemrod (2003), 'Dying to Save Taxes: Evidence from Estate-Tax Returns on the Death Elasticity', Review of Economics and Statistics, 85 (2), May, 256-65 -- B. Douglas Bernheim, Robert J. Lemke and John Karl Scholz (2004), 'Do Estate and Gift Taxes Affect the Timing of Private Transfers?', Journal of Public Economics, 88 (12), December, 2617-34 -- James Alm and Leslie A. Whittington (1997), 'Income Taxes and the Timing of Marital Decisions', Journal of Public Economics, 64 (2), May, 219-40 -- Jeff Grogger and Stephen G. Bronars (2001), 'The Effect of Welfare Payments on the Marriage and Fertility Behavior of Unwed Mothers: Results from a Twins Experiment', Journal of Political Economy, 109 (3), June, 529-45 -- Reagan Baughman and Stacy Dickert-Conlin (2009), 'The Earned Income Tax Credit and Fertility', Journal of Population Economics, 22 (3), July, 537-63 -- James Alm, Betty R. Jackson and Michael McKee (2009), 'Getting the Word Out: Enforcement Information Dissemination and Compliance Behavior', Journal of Public Economics, 93 (3-4), April, 392-402 -- Henrik Jacobsen Kleven, Martin B. Knudsen, Claus Thustrup Kreiner, Søren Pedersen and Emmanuel Saez (2011), 'Unwilling or Unable to Cheat? Evidence from a Tax Audit Experiment in Denmark', Econometrica, 79 (3), May, 651-92 -- Yuriy Gorodnichenko, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez and Klara Sabirianova Peter (2009), 'Myth and Reality of Flat Tax Reform: Micro Estimates of Tax Evasion Response and Welfare Effects in Russia', Journal of Political Economy, 117 (3), June, 504-54 -- Dean Karlan and John A. List (2007), 'Does Price Matter in Charitable Giving? Evidence from a Large-Scale Natural Field Experiment', American Economic Review, 97 (5), December, 1774-93 -- Arthur C. Brooks (2007), 'Income Tax Policy and Charitable Giving', Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 26 (3), Summer, 599-612 -- Gerald E. Auten, Holger Sieg and Charles T. Clotfelter (2002), 'Charitable Giving, Income, and Taxes: An Analysis of Panel Data', American Economic Review, 92 (1), March, 371-82 -- Raj Chetty, Adam Looney and Kory Kroft (2009), 'Salience and Taxation: Theory and Evidence', American Economic Review, 99 (4), September, 1145-77 -- Amy Finkelstein (2009), 'E-ZTax: Tax Salience and Tax Rates', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 124 (3), August, 969-1010 -- Raj Chetty, John N. Friedman, Søren Leth-Petersen, Torben Heien Nielsen and Tore Olsen (2014), 'Active vs. Passive Decisions and Crowd-Out in Retirement Savings Accounts: Evidence from Denmark', Quarterly Journal of Economics, 129 (3), August, 1141-219.
    Abstract: The last several decades have seen major advances in the ways in which public economists investigate behavioural responses to taxation. Recent research has utilized new data sets and has applied new empirical methods, including laboratory experiments and natural and controlled field experiments. The application of behavioural economics has contributed insights from other disciplines, especially psychology. Here James Alm and Sebastian Leguizamon discuss the lessons from all this work. Covering such topics as labour supply, charitable giving, savings, capital gains realisations, mobility, bequests, family structure, reported income and tax evasion, they highlight the current state of knowledge in this area. They present new thinking about the relevant issues and an analysis of useful policy options
    Note: The recommended readings are available in the print version, or may be available via the link to your library's holdings , Includes bibliographical references and index
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 18
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781785361302
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (200 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New horizons in institutional and evolutionary economics
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Atkinson, Glen Law and economics from an evolutionary perspective
    DDC: 340.09
    RVK:
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Handelsrecht ; Gesellschaftsrecht ; Rechtsökonomik ; Evolutionsökonomik ; USA ; Law and economic development ; Electronic books ; USA ; Handelsrecht ; Gesellschaftsrecht ; Ökonomische Theorie des Rechts
    Abstract: 1. Evolutionary method in law and economics -- 2. Causes and consequences of the widening of the market: a case of cumulative economic evolution -- 3. The corporate form and the state -- 4. Interstate commerce and state regulation of business -- 5. Interstate commerce and federal regulation of business -- 6. John R. Commons and co-evolution of law and economics.
    Abstract: Law and economics are interdependent. Using a historical case analysis approach, this book demonstrates how the legal process relates to and is affected by economic circumstances. Glen Atkinson and Stephen P. Paschall examine this co-evolution in the context of the economic development that occurred in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as well as the impact of the law on that development. Specifically, the authors explore the development of a national market, the transformation of the corporation, and the conflict between state and federal control over businesses. Their focus on dynamic, integrated systems presents an alternative to mainstream law and economics. The authors apply John R. Commons's approach to three main law and economics issues: the changing relationship between corporations and the state, the application of the Commerce Clause and the Fourteenth Amendment of the US Constitution to state and federal regulation of business, and the relationship of antitrust law to industrialization. They provide a valuable linking of law with changing economic circumstances such as antitrust policy changes and the development of the corporate form. This analytical approach to the practice of law and economics will be of interest to researchers, students, and faculty in law and economics, economic history, constitutional law, economic regulation, public policy, and the sociology of law. Business students and researchers will also find value in this book's presentation of court decisions and exploration of economic development
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
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  • 19
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781784716493
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (384 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: New directions in modern economics
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als The great financial meltdown
    DDC: 330.9/0511
    RVK:
    Keywords: 2007-2009 ; Wirtschaftskrise ; Wirtschaftspolitik ; Welt ; Economic policy ; Global Financial Crisis, 2008-2009 ; Electronic books ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Finanzkrise
    Abstract: Part I -- Introduction -- 1. The crisis in context / Turan Subasat -- 2. Roots of the current economic crisis: capitalism, forms of capitalism, policies, and contingent events / David M. Kotz -- Part II -- Crisis and profitability -- 3. Crisis theory and the falling rate of profit / David Harvey -- 4. Monocausality and crisis theory - a reply to David Harvey / Michael Roberts -- 5. Booms, depressions, and the rate of profit: a pluralist, inductive guide / Alan Freeman -- Part III -- The crisis in economic and social reproduction -- 6. A global approach to the global financial crisis / John Weeks -- 7. The incubator of the great meltdown of 2008: the structure and practices of US neoliberalism as attacks on labor / Al Campbell and Erdogan Bakir -- 8. The value of history and the history of value / Radhika Desai -- 9. The systemic failings in framing neo-liberal social policy / Ben Fine -- 10. The policy-based and conjunctural causes of the 2008 crisis / Turan Subasat -- 11. The systemic causes of the 2008 crisis - an alternative theoretical perspective / Turan Subasat -- Part IV crisis and finance -- 12. Inequality, money markets and crisis / Simon Mohun -- 13. The crisis of finance and the crisis of accumulation: it was not a 'Lehman Brothers moment' / Jan Toporowski -- 14. Contradictions of capital accumulation in the age of financialization / Özgür Orhangazi -- 15. Which crisis, of which capitalism? a Marxian and financial Keynesian interpretation of neoliberalism and the great recession / Riccardo Bellofiore -- 16. The contested nature of financialization in emerging capitalist economies / Annina Kaltenbrunner and Elif Karacimen -- Part V -- The crisis unfolds -- 17. The Greek crisis: structural or conjunctural? / Stavros D. Mavroudeas -- 18. Greece, global fault-lines and the disintegrative logics of Germany's primacy in Europe / Vassilis K. Fouskas -- 19. Conclusions / John Weeks.
    Abstract: The Great Financial Meltdown reviews, advocates and critiques the systemic, conjunctural and policy-based explanations for the 2008 crisis. The book expertly examines these explanations to assess their analytical and empirical validity. Comprehensive yet accessible chapters, written by a collection of prominent authors, cover a wide range of political economy approaches to the crisis, from Marxian through to Post Keynesian and other heterodox schools. This interrogation of economic policy in light of the financial crisis is essential reading for real-word economists. To those seeking to understand the current economic stagnation and failings of the system, it offers an enlightening exposition of contemporary political economy
    Note: Contributors include: E. Bakir, R. Bellofiore, A. Campbell, R. Desai, B. Fine, D. Fouskas, A. Freeman, D. Harvey, A. Kaltenbrunner, E. Karacimen, D. Kotz, S. Mavroudeas, S. Mohun, O. Orhangazi, M. Roberts, T. Subasat, J. Toporowski, J. Weeks , Includes bibliographical references and index
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 20
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Northampton, MA : Edward Elgar Publishing, Inc
    ISBN: 9781783478996
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (528 p) , cm
    Series Statement: Edward Elgar E-Book Archive
    Series Statement: Research handbooks on impact assessment
    Parallel Title: Available in another form
    Keywords: Environmental impact analysis ; Electronic books
    Abstract: Chapter 1. Introduction / Davide Geneletti -- Part 1 Mainstreaming biodiversity and ecosystem services in impact assessment types -- 2. Spatial ecosystem service analysis for environmental impact assessment of projects / Lisa Mandle and Heather Tallis -- 3. Ecosystem services analysis for strategic environmental assessment: concepts and examples / Davide Geneletti -- 4. Scoping health impact assessment: ecosystem services as a framing device / Pierre Horwitz and Margot W. Parkes -- 5. Matching an ecosystem services approach with social impact assessment / Leena Karrasch -- 6. Economic evaluation of the impacts of transportation infrastructures on ecosystem services / Léa Tardieu -- 7. Addressing biodiversity and ecosystem services in life cycle assessment / Assumpció Antón, Danielle Maia de Souza, Félix Teillard and Llorenç Milà i Canals -- Part II Applications in different sectors -- 8. Impacts of urban development on biodiversity and ecosystem services / Berit Balfors, Juan Azcarate, Ulla Mörtberg, Mårten Karlson and Sara Odelius Gordon -- 9. Impacts of agricultural and forest management on biodiversity and ecosystem services / Christine Fürst, Susanne Frank, Marcos Jimenez, Daniel Alejandro Rozas Vásquez, Katrin Pietzsch and Frank Pietzsch -- 10. Applications of biodiversity and ecosystem services impact assessment in spatial planning / Leena Kopperoinen, Christian Albert and Pekka Itkonen -- 11. Ecosystem services in marine environmental impact assessment: tools to support marine planning at project and strategic scales / Tara Hooper, Olivia Langmead and Matthew Ashley -- 12. Understanding the impacts of ecotourism on biodiversity: a multi-scale, cumulative issue influenced by perceptions and politics / David Newsome and Mike Hughes -- 13. Exploring the tradeoffs between wind energy and biodiversity conservation / Lea Bulling and Johann Köppel -- 14. Cumulative effects of dams on biodiversity / Asha Rajvanshi -- Part III Current issues and challenges -- 15. Addressing the interactions between biodiversity conservation and poverty alleviation in impact assessment / Dilys Roe and Davide Geneletti -- 16. Biodiversity offsets for 'no net loss' through impact assessment / Susie Brownlie and Jo Treweek -- 17. Mitigation for the people: an ecosystem services framework / Heather Tallis, Christina M. Kennedy, Mary Ruckelshaus, Joshua Goldstein and Joseph M. Kiesecker -- 18. Promoting nature-based solutions for climate adaptation in cities through impact assessment / Davide Geneletti, Linda Zardo and Chiara Cortinovis -- 19. Where are the best places for the next billion people? think globally, plan regionally / Richard T.T. Forman and Jianguo (Jingle) Wu -- Conclusions -- 20. Strengthening biodiversity and ecosystem services in impact assessment for better decisions / Davide Geneletti.
    Abstract: This Handbook presents state-of-the-art methodological guidance and discussion of international practice related to the integration of biodiversity and ecosystem services in impact assessment, featuring contributions from leading researchers and practitioners the world over. Its multidisciplinary approach covers contributions across five continents to broaden the scope of the field both thematically and geographically. A multifaceted variety of case studies provide examples of the use of information on biodiversity and ecosystem services in different types of impact assessment to improve decisions at all levels, from strategic choices to individual projects. In addition to its discussion of how biodiversity and ecosystem services can improve the salience and effectiveness of impact assessment, this Handbook presents a range of applications and possible solutions to challenges in key policy and planning sectors, including urban development, land use, energy, marine areas, infrastructure, agriculture, forestry, health and tourism. This Handbook's combination of cutting-edge literature and methodological guidance supports researchers, practitioners and students in developing and implementing biodiversity and ecosystem services-inclusive impact assessment processes, which can contribute to better decisions about the use of our lands and waters. As such, it will appeal not only to scholars of impact assessment but of environmental sciences, environmental engineering, natural sciences, planning and economics as well
    Note: Contributors include: C. Albert, A. Antón, M. Ashley, J. Azcarate, B. Balfors, S. Brownlie, L. Bulling, C. Cortinovis, R.T.T. Forman, S. Frank, C. Fürst, D. Geneletti, J. Goldstein, T. Hooper, P. Horwitz, M. Hughes, P. Itkonen, M. Jimenez, M. Karlson, L. Karrasch, C.M. Kennedy, J.M. Kiesecker, J. Köppel, L. Kopperoinen, O. Langmead, D. Maia de Souza, L. Mandle, L. Milà i Canals, U. Mörtberg, D. Newsome, S. Odelius Gordon, M.W. Parkes, K. Pietzsch, F. Pietzsch, A. Rajvanshi, D. Roe, D.A. Rozas Vásquez, M. Ruckelshaus, H. Tallis, L. Tardieu, F. Teillard, J. Treweek, J. Wu, L. Zardo , Includes bibliographical references and index
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